This morning I spotted a large solar prominence through my Lunt solar-scope, so this afternoon I had a go at imaging it (with an old Philips mono webcam).
It was tricky to catch a long enough gap in the clouds to capture a pair of image-sequences (one at low gain, to get the detail on the disk and then one with a higher gain for the fainter prominence), but I did manage it twice within an hour and a half.
And it's interesting to see how much the view had changed over that interval:

On the few occasions this year that I've set up my Lunt solar telescope, the solar activity has been very sparse.

However this weekend I saw an active sunspot group plus a large prominence, so I plugged in an old Philips webcam to try some imaging.
I captured two sets of 400 frames (1/2500-sec for the disk detail and 1/500 for the fainter prominence), and stacked each using the AutoStakkert program.
Then for a change I used the ImageJ program, which can read the 32-bit FITS files directly and is much better for overlaying (rather than adding) a pair of images than IRIS.